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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Coyote: The Ultimate Deer Predator?
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<blockquote data-quote="DeerCamp" data-source="post: 5233094" data-attributes="member: 21011"><p>I'm a science guy. So when I hear research that contradicts what I think (or want) to be true, I will usually dig into it pretty hard. </p><p></p><p>I've done that with coyotes and the research seems solid that on the landscape, coyotes are very resilient. </p><p></p><p>That said - I generally shoot coyotes because a) I like it and b) on a very local level, when we shoot coyotes, I see fewer of them for a while. So if it takes a few weeks for new coyotes to move in - and then we shoot them too - I think its possible that we are making a small, local impact, particularly on the fawns and does, and rabbits, whose home range is on our small property.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DeerCamp, post: 5233094, member: 21011"] I'm a science guy. So when I hear research that contradicts what I think (or want) to be true, I will usually dig into it pretty hard. I've done that with coyotes and the research seems solid that on the landscape, coyotes are very resilient. That said - I generally shoot coyotes because a) I like it and b) on a very local level, when we shoot coyotes, I see fewer of them for a while. So if it takes a few weeks for new coyotes to move in - and then we shoot them too - I think its possible that we are making a small, local impact, particularly on the fawns and does, and rabbits, whose home range is on our small property. [/QUOTE]
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Quality Deer Management
Coyote: The Ultimate Deer Predator?
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